APOD: NGC 253: Dusty Island Universe (2009 Nov 21)

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Expand view Topic review: APOD: NGC 253: Dusty Island Universe (2009 Nov 21)

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by Chris Peterson » Wed Dec 09, 2009 12:44 pm

SKY DOGS wrote:whats the story with the arms being made by gravity waves and not a spinning in motion?
"Gravity waves" is not the correct term- those are something completely different and are not what causes spiral arms. The arms are density concentrations, and there are several links already posted in this thread that discuss the mechanisms behind their formation.

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by SKY DOGS » Wed Dec 09, 2009 5:59 am

whats the story with the arms being made by gravity waves and not a spinning in motion?

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by The Code » Fri Nov 27, 2009 9:00 pm

bystander wrote:Why would you think that gravitational affects would be different for dust and gas than for stars? I don't think it's the mass by itself that matters, it's the angular momentum that counts.
Is it not what happens when big objects become small objects?
What happened when a planet smashed into the earth? Did they not become big again?

Small objects momentum is easily changed?

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by bystander » Fri Nov 27, 2009 8:40 pm

mark swain wrote:I actually think, that the black hole is consuming dead star matter. Gas, Dust, But as Chris points out, not all gets past the Event Horizon. Most of the matter just converges to form new stars. but, here comes the interesting bit. They move outwards . Small particles, gas, dust, move inwards. and heavy objects like stars move the other way. but on a time scale that is very hard to see. When i look at the above picture of our milky way. I do not see stars spiraling inwards. i see them spiraling out wards, like on a production line. All be it very very slowly.
Why would you think that gravitational affects would be different for dust and gas than for stars? I don't think it's the mass by itself that matters, it's the angular momentum that counts.

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by The Code » Fri Nov 27, 2009 8:32 pm

I actually think, that the black hole is consuming dead star matter. Gas, Dust, But as Chris points out, not all gets past the Event Horizon. Most of the matter just converges to form new stars. but, here comes the interesting bit. They move outwards . Small particles, gas, dust, move inwards. and heavy objects like stars move the other way. but on a time scale that is very hard to see. When i look at the above picture of our milky way. I do not see stars spiraling inwards. i see them spiraling out wards, like on a production line. All be it very very slowly.

Agreed. excellent Thread.

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by rstevenson » Fri Nov 27, 2009 1:48 pm

Today's (Nov. 27th, 2009) APOD provides an interesting adjunct to this discussion.
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap091127.html

Quoting the Oct. 2005 article at the last link on the APOD page ("massive black hole")...
...images showing in unprecedented detail how matter spirals toward the black hole at the centre of a galaxy...
...a detailed view of the channelling process of matter, from the main part of the galaxy down to the very end in the nucleus...
...These observations provide astronomers with new insights on how supermassive black holes lurking inside galaxies get fed...
It's clear from the rest of the article and the images that an area of about 5500 Ly is involved in "feeding" the black hole, though it also seems obvious that the area just outside this radius is piling up with gas and dust, perhaps some of it being pushed out of the central area by radiation pressure.

There's a natural tendency, already discussed above, to interpret the spirals as the path of material falling towards the black hole. But I've read lots of background material lately (prompted by this discussion) that reinforces the idea that the spirals are illusions caused by coincidental clustering of material as it orbits. Nvertheless, material is infalling, though as the paper says (and Chris said above), "...only a small amount of gas and stars are apparently being swallowed by the black hole at any given moment."

A very interesting thread. :)

Rob

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by Chris Peterson » Fri Nov 27, 2009 2:02 am

mark swain wrote:How can new stars form, when there is no input to feed them? Where does the new matter to feed new stars come from if there is nothing falling inwards?
There is some material spiraling inwards. But it isn't being "sucked" in the way a lot of the stories suggest. Except for material very close to the black hole, most of the dust and gas is only very gradually losing energy to local collisions and getting closer to it. The effect of the black hole is to concentrate material in a large ring or disc, where it provides an environment where stars can form. Given long enough, this stuff will end up in the center, but it may take a good long time. Nothing moves directly towards the black hole, it just orbits, and can't get swallowed up until the orbit decays down to the size of the event horizon. That's a pretty long process.

Even in this very active galaxy, though, the mass of material involved is small compared to the mass of the galaxy as a whole.

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by The Code » Fri Nov 27, 2009 12:51 am

Thanks rstevenson

I,ll take all that in. Over next few days.

Brb.
Chris Peterson wrote:
mark swain wrote:If objects/Stars are being created at a very high rate. One would assume other objects being crushed at the same time?
Why? I don't see the logical connection between the two, and I don't think there is any actual suggestion that the latter is occurring. It is usual for stars to form in areas rich in gas and dust, particularly if a mechanism exists to produce shock fronts. This area is influenced by the central black hole, but material here isn't being consumed.
Chris, your answers just give me new questions.

This is just one.


How can new stars form, when there is no input to feed them? Where does the new matter to feed new stars come from if there is nothing falling inwards? Hawking evaporation?

Then I read this:

The keys to understanding the amplification is the rotation of the disk and the idea of pumping a swing. To increase the amplitude of motion on a garden swing, it is crucial that the pushes be applied at the correct times, say at both the forward and backward ends of the swing. Such a tuning of an applied force to an oscillator is known as a resonance. In a galaxy the situation is a little more complicated than a swing. Stars do not travel around the disk in perfect circles, but orbit on precessing ellipses that can be conveniently thought of as the combination of motion around a circle combined with a small ``epicycle'' (as in the Ptolemaic theory of the solar system). Stars on orbits nearer the center go around the circle (not the epicycle) in a shorter time than those further out, an effect that will destroy any material feature within the disk of stars. The epicycles themselves generally have longer periods with increasing radius in the disk. However, it turns out that for the mass distributions of most galaxies the combination of the motion around the circle and half of the epicyclic frequency does not vary much with radius. That is, if a two-armed spiral pattern is created with a pattern speed that matches this combination of frequencies, than the stars on their slightly elliptical orbits will be able to respond in tune with this oscillation; that is, a wide range of radii will be near a resonance of the applied spiral wave so that it should grow in intensity. Ordinarily this spiral wave amplifier does not have a ``feedback'' circuit available, so the wave is excited, grows into the large visible spiral, and then fades away as the shearing forces overwhelm the amplifying forces.



Did I say complex? Guys please don,t scare me away. I really do want to understand.

Thanks Rob.

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by Chris Peterson » Thu Nov 26, 2009 2:16 pm

mark swain wrote:If objects/Stars are being created at a very high rate. One would assume other objects being crushed at the same time?
Why? I don't see the logical connection between the two, and I don't think there is any actual suggestion that the latter is occurring. It is usual for stars to form in areas rich in gas and dust, particularly if a mechanism exists to produce shock fronts. This area is influenced by the central black hole, but material here isn't being consumed.
And the spiral i see, is not my imagination. Or any allusion. But newly created stars, spiraling out wards.
Nobody suggested that the spiral is an illusion. The illusion is that stars are moving inwards or outwards, rather than in fixed orbits. There are no stars spiraling outwards in this or any galaxy. There's no mechanism that could even provide that sort of orbital dynamic.
Is not your spiral arm, an indication that dark matter is also traveling with us around and around?
I don't see the connection. Dark matter orbits within and around galaxies, like all matter subject to gravity. But the spiral arms aren't evidence of that.
The orbit of our planet and solar system around the galaxy Is a totally different concept to how spiral arms work. would you not say?
No. Spiral arms are density concentrations- concentrations of individual stellar systems each in simple, precessing elliptical orbits. The orbital dynamics are easily described by simple classical mechanics.

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by rstevenson » Thu Nov 26, 2009 1:25 pm

This article may get you started towards a better understanding of what spiral arms are in a galaxy. (I Googled "spiral arms galaxy simulations" and chose just this one link. There are many, and this may not be the best.)
http://nedwww.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/E ... lberg.html

Rob

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by The Code » Thu Nov 26, 2009 9:42 am

mark swain wrote:
Chris Peterson wrote:Spiral galaxies have a central bulge (probably always, even when the viewpoint might make it not apparent). The whirlpool effect you describe is an illusion. Material is not spiraling into the center of these galaxies, and the central black holes are only absorbing a tiny amount of matter from their surrounds, and those surrounds are far too small to be visible at the scale where you can see the entire galaxy.
What?

So can you please explain what we are seeing?
Chris Peterson wrote:We are seeing a spiral shape. The brain tries to interpret spirals as material flowing into the center (or out of it), but that isn't usually what's going on. The Sun has orbited the Milky Way many times since it was formed, but our distance from the center hasn't changed. Likewise for all the stars you see in any spiral galaxy- each is orbiting in an approximately elliptical orbit (it's a little more complex than simple Keplerian orbit dynamics, because the mass is distributed), and each is staying about the same distance from the center over time. There is no inward flow of material in a spiral galaxy.
Quote From bystander's link:

The ring around the black hole is bursting with new star formation. An inflow of material toward the central bar of the galaxy is causing the ring to light up with new stars.

"The ring itself is a fascinating object worthy of study because it is forming stars at a very high rate," said Kartik Sheth, an astronomer at NASA's Spitzer Science Center. Sheth and Helou are part of a team that made the observations.

In the Spitzer image, infrared light with shorter wavelengths is blue, while longer-wavelength light is red. The galaxy's red spiral arms and the swirling spokes seen between the arms show dust heated by newborn stars. Older populations of stars scattered through the galaxy are blue. The fuzzy blue dot to the left, which appears to fit snuggly between the arms, is a companion galaxy.


If objects/Stars are being created at a very high rate. One would assume other objects being crushed at the same time?

And the spiral i see, is not my imagination. Or any allusion. But newly created stars, spiraling out wards.

If I am on a moving train and I fire a Gun(Blanks) out of the window, Where does the smoke go?

If I am on a moving train and the air outside the train is going as fast as me and i fire the same blank starting pistol do I see the smoke for a lot longer?

Is not your spiral arm, an indication that dark matter is also traveling with us around and around?

The orbit of our planet and solar system around the galaxy Is a totally different concept to how spiral arms work. would you not say?

Mark.

ps
I appreciate every bodies input to this thread.

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by Chris Peterson » Thu Nov 26, 2009 4:06 am

mark swain wrote:Ok . Thanks Chris. Oh yeah, check this out.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/spac ... alaxy.html
It's still not sucking up much. Ignoring the dramatic headline, it consumes what "comes within it reach", and you can be certain that on the scale of the galaxy, that isn't much. Again, black holes at the center of galaxies have about the same gravitational effect as the center of a galaxy without a black hole. Near the black hole there is an accretionary region, and anything within that zone will lose energy and spiral into the center. But you only have to go a few light years away before there's no possibility of that happening. The vast majority of stars in this (or any) galaxy go about their orbits for their entire existence without being affected by any central supermassive black hole.

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by bystander » Thu Nov 26, 2009 3:06 am

mark swain wrote:Ok . Thanks Chris. Oh yeah, check this out.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/spac ... alaxy.html
No wonder you are so misinformed with your newspapers printing garbage like that. Try the Spitzer news release that came with the image. Nowhere do you see anything about black holes sucking up planets. But it must be true, it was in the newspaper. :roll:

http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/Media/re ... ease.shtml

http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap090727.html
http://asterisk.apod.com/vie ... 11&t=17140
http://asterisk.apod.com/vie ... =9&t=17148

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by The Code » Thu Nov 26, 2009 12:18 am

Chris Peterson wrote:
mark swain wrote:Unless your large star, is trying to get to the same place another 30,000 stars, also want to get to.
I don't know of anywhere in the Universe where that situation is happening, though.
What happens to A huge Star,When another huge Star runs into it?
Presumably, it depends on the angle of the collision. The two could pull apart after transferring some material, or they might coalesce. In the latter case, the result would depend on where each was in its stellar evolution. You might end up with an unstable mass, or with more material to fuse. In any case, such collisions are extremely rare.
Ok . Thanks Chris. Oh yeah, check this out.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/spac ... alaxy.html

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by Chris Peterson » Thu Nov 26, 2009 12:01 am

mark swain wrote:Unless your large star, is trying to get to the same place another 30,000 stars, also want to get to.
I don't know of anywhere in the Universe where that situation is happening, though.
What happens to A huge Star,When another huge Star runs into it?
Presumably, it depends on the angle of the collision. The two could pull apart after transferring some material, or they might coalesce. In the latter case, the result would depend on where each was in its stellar evolution. You might end up with an unstable mass, or with more material to fuse. In any case, such collisions are extremely rare.

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by The Code » Wed Nov 25, 2009 11:20 pm

Chris Peterson wrote:
neufer wrote:(Loss of angular momentum due to gravitational radiation will doom you eventually, however.)
Certainly. Of course, the same is true whether or not a galaxy has a black hole at the center. Given long enough (and we're talking many, many times the age of the Universe) everything ends up in the center.
Unless your large star, is trying to get to the same place another 30,000 stars, also want to get to.

What happens to A huge Star,When another huge Star runs into it?

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by GaryR » Wed Nov 25, 2009 5:47 am

PassionateBomba wrote: Science gave us abortion, and said it was good, after all we are either all atheists or fools. Now we see the most fervent opposition to abortion comes from those that have experienced it. Sometimes the soul, truth rears its ugly head at the wrong time.

You are bringing religion or moralities to the forum, which is not welcomed! Please take the matter up in the Cafe.

Even today, we are learning that the leading scientists on global warming are suddenly coming into doubt. The word fraud is even beginning to surface in some reports. WOW! And scientists in Australia were saying the Earth was cooling all along. They didn't get media attention though, and I would "guess" there wasn't much money to be made in cooling. But maybe if we get the temp down another degree or two, Al Gore won't sweat so much, and that will benefit us all.

Neither is political discussion welcomed here. Again take it up in the Cafe. This pro- and anti-global warming argument has gotten tiresome.

Maybe this was off topic, but was intended for background.
Why would anyone speak callously about Mark thinking black holes suck everything up. That's how they were represented to the public, and trust me on this one, most people are not reading the latest and greatest on scientific change of hearts. When science makes its public pitch, it never fails to claim absolute authoritative truth. Maybe that's the last Mark heard of it, I know it was the last I heard of it. Now this thing with so much gravity, even photons can't escape its pull, can only suck things up that happen to jump in to it. Hmmm. One thing about scientific truth is, if you live long enough, it will change with the next need to get a name in a scientific journal.

It is an outright falsehood that scientists claim "absolute authoritative truth", as you put it. They are forever revising their opinions based on latest findings and observations, and they are always arguing their hypotheses and theories with their peers. They are not doing it for money either as you seem to believe. If they are, they must be stupid for choosing a low paying career when they could use their smarts to get rich off Wall Street like those "brilliant" traders there who got multi-million dollar bonuses. No, they are doing it because they love making discoveries and coming up with possible explanations for them, based, of course, what make sense, not what fits their religious or ideological beliefs if any.

NASA gets a lot of money. Public perception and interest is absolutely critical. After all, its the public's money they get.
Now Enceladus is erupting ice. Ice? This conjures up visions of under ice oceans and of course, the trusty old purse puller, Life on another planet! We need billions. We need them now! Remember everybody, the Earth was once covered in ice too. Enceladus might be in birthing pains, ice blows all over the place! A whale might pop out at anytime. We must be there, give us billions!

Are you saying that the "billions" spent on scientific research and space exploration are a waste of money? If it weren't for those "billions", we wouldn't have all those fantastic pictures from Hubble Space Telescope and the robotic spacecrafts that explored the solar system. We wouldn't have either the necessary miniaturization of electronics that NASA funded to reduce spacecraft weight which eventually gave us all those wonderful gizmos that we can't live without today!

Mark, keep asking the questions buddy. You will get many answers that go deeper and deeper until you don't know what is being said. If you don't think so, you best brush up on your quantum physics. Reading other threads you see that's where it winds up if it needs to. I asked a question here once about why NASA feels the need to publicize these "doctored" photos. Just show us what we see, at least along side the the doctored one. You won't see many of these photos in your telescope. In the end, I thought I was at a lecture of the Einstein Guild.

These "doctored" photos were created for the benefits of scientific study of the chemical and electromagnetic signatures given off by the planets, stars, galaxies, and other space bodies, not for general public! They don't have the time to make the photos you want, They just happen to make them available to us for our enjoyment and wonder. If you want the pictures to be what your eyes would see, you will be disappointed and dissatisfied.

Don't get me wrong, I love space (APOD), always have. Always had a telescope too, but never much good at using it. Showed my friends some craters and moons and Orion's "star". Wasn't as pretty as those shown in APOD. Mine wouldn't have generated billions either.
Einstein once interpreted that gravity could bend light and was later "proven" by Eddington that could see stars behind the Sun in an eclipse. The Mayans used this principle thousands of years ago to travel all the way to 2012, by starring into desert thermals. Most of us can do this now by standing between two mirrors holding a candle. Don't try that at home until someone has learnt you how to get back! Hint: you're going to need a pyramid.

Your simple backyard telescope will never match what you can get from the "billion" dollar space- and land-based large telescopes, but if you are willing to spend a few thousands on a better telescope outfitted with an expensive camera and computer system and set it up in a dark sky site, you can get pretty good deep sky pictures.

Don't worry so much about the bulge in the galaxy center. A city from a distance appears to bulge into the night sky as well, but it doesn't. Just a process of living in a 3D universe.
And don't confuse knowledge with thinking. There is no such thing as absolute knowledge. In that case, the Earth would still be flat. A picture and/or an illegible mathematical equation will not gain us any knowledge on what's occurring in our own galaxy, let alone a distant one. That would be, theoretical. At 10 million light years away, the Silver Dollar Galaxy may not even exist now. The whole universe may have blown up (or jumped into a black hole), but it will take many millenniums for the light to reach us, or stop reaching us. BTW, a galaxy doesn't light up like its having its picture took at the corner studio. But, If you look at it long enough you can almost hear it roar. Sounds sort of like an approaching freight train doesn't it? Everything seems to sound like that. Must have something to do with chicken.
Some of the guys here know more than 1000 guys like me will ever know about these things. What they know is, the principles behind the theories. Its how the theories are often presented as knowledge that is the problem.
The question is, WHY? As they say in politics, follow the money, prestige, or power.

Sounds like you want your science to be simple and easy to understand, based mostly on what you can see or imagine. Sorry, that is not how science works. That may be how religion works, but religion is not science, which requires a rigorous examination of evidence, a lot of measurements and mathematical calculations and a great deal of discussions. There are people who have so-called alternative theories, for example, the "electric universe" proponents, who frequently pop up in this forum and are met with collective eye-rollings.

Again, I love space and its all consuming darkness, I love honesty and its all revealing light, more! The photos are lovely.
Keep asking questions, the all seeing eyes must render their replies. Sometimes, they are even right!
May Peace and Love bless you ALL, and light your universe beyond all understanding. Its worth more than all the universes combined.
PB
We welcome any and all who comes to this forum wanting to learn more about what they see in the APODs, but not to push their personal anti-science agendas.

Gary

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by Chris Peterson » Wed Nov 25, 2009 4:15 am

neufer wrote:(Loss of angular momentum due to gravitational radiation will doom you eventually, however.)
Certainly. Of course, the same is true whether or not a galaxy has a black hole at the center. Given long enough (and we're talking many, many times the age of the Universe) everything ends up in the center.

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by neufer » Wed Nov 25, 2009 4:05 am

Chris Peterson wrote:there is no significant inflow of material into the center of spiral galaxies, and black holes don't generally suck things up.
If your angular velocity times your distance is enough (i.e., such that a simple non-relativistic angular momentum conservation calculation indicates that your angular velocity approaches the speed of light as you fell towards the Schwarzchild radius) then you probably won't be sucked up by the black hole. For the ~ 4 million solar mass black hole (such as that which lies at the center of our Milky Way) an angular velocity of 85 mph at 10 light years distance should be sufficient. (Loss of angular momentum due to gravitational radiation will doom you eventually, however.)

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by Chris Peterson » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:33 am

apodman wrote:If I put more than one topic in a single post, I generally put a "---" dividing line between them to let the reader know I'm starting a separate thought. It is economical and effective.
I think in this case it's more about missing meds than missing dividers.

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by apodman » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:26 am

Have mercy on a poor reader like me.

One topic per post, please.

If you put more than six topics in a single post, please provide an outline and indicate which one is your point.

---

If I put more than one topic in a single post, I generally put a "---" dividing line between them to let the reader know I'm starting a separate thought. It is economical and effective. Of course for others it may only interrupt and ruin the soapbox effect.

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by PassionateBomba » Wed Nov 25, 2009 2:08 am

I think Mark has every right to his questions, even in commenting in a way that addicts would find viral. Discussion is the black hole of civilizations.
Science gave us abortion, and said it was good, after all we are either all atheists or fools. Now we see the most fervent opposition to abortion comes from those that have experienced it. Sometimes the soul, truth rears its ugly head at the wrong time.
Even today, we are learning that the leading scientists on global warming are suddenly coming into doubt. The word fraud is even beginning to surface in some reports. WOW! And scientists in Australia were saying the Earth was cooling all along. They didn't get media attention though, and I would "guess" there wasn't much money to be made in cooling. But maybe if we get the temp down another degree or two, Al Gore won't sweat so much, and that will benefit us all.
Maybe this was off topic, but was intended for background.
Why would anyone speak callously about Mark thinking black holes suck everything up. That's how they were represented to the public, and trust me on this one, most people are not reading the latest and greatest on scientific change of hearts. When science makes its public pitch, it never fails to claim absolute authoritative truth. Maybe that's the last Mark heard of it, I know it was the last I heard of it. Now this thing with so much gravity, even photons can't escape its pull, can only suck things up that happen to jump in to it. Hmmm. One thing about scientific truth is, if you live long enough, it will change with the next need to get a name in a scientific journal.
NASA gets a lot of money. Public perception and interest is absolutely critical. After all, its the public's money they get.
Now Enceladus is erupting ice. Ice? This conjures up visions of under ice oceans and of course, the trusty old purse puller, Life on another planet! We need billions. We need them now! Remember everybody, the Earth was once covered in ice too. Enceladus might be in birthing pains, ice blows all over the place! A whale might pop out at anytime. We must be there, give us billions!
Mark, keep asking the questions buddy. You will get many answers that go deeper and deeper until you don't know what is being said. If you don't think so, you best brush up on your quantum physics. Reading other threads you see that's where it winds up if it needs to. I asked a question here once about why NASA feels the need to publicize these "doctored" photos. Just show us what we see, at least along side the the doctored one. You won't see many of these photos in your telescope. In the end, I thought I was at a lecture of the Einstein Guild.
Don't get me wrong, I love space (APOD), always have. Always had a telescope too, but never much good at using it. Showed my friends some craters and moons and Orion's "star". Wasn't as pretty as those shown in APOD. Mine wouldn't have generated billions either.
Einstein once interpreted that gravity could bend light and was later "proven" by Eddington that could see stars behind the Sun in an eclipse. The Mayans used this principle thousands of years ago to travel all the way to 2012, by starring into desert thermals. Most of us can do this now by standing between two mirrors holding a candle. Don't try that at home until someone has learnt you how to get back! Hint: you're going to need a pyramid.
Don't worry so much about the bulge in the galaxy center. A city from a distance appears to bulge into the night sky as well, but it doesn't. Just a process of living in a 3D universe.
And don't confuse knowledge with thinking. There is no such thing as absolute knowledge. In that case, the Earth would still be flat. A picture and/or an illegible mathematical equation will not gain us any knowledge on what's occurring in our own galaxy, let alone a distant one. That would be, theoretical. At 10 million light years away, the Silver Dollar Galaxy may not even exist now. The whole universe may have blown up (or jumped into a black hole), but it will take many millenniums for the light to reach us, or stop reaching us. BTW, a galaxy doesn't light up like its having its picture took at the corner studio. But, If you look at it long enough you can almost hear it roar. Sounds sort of like an approaching freight train doesn't it? Everything seems to sound like that. Must have something to do with chicken.
Some of the guys here know more than 1000 guys like me will ever know about these things. What they know is, the principles behind the theories. Its how the theories are often presented as knowledge that is the problem.
The question is, WHY?
As they say in politics, follow the money, prestige, or power.
Again, I love space and its all consuming darkness, I love honesty and its all revealing light, more! The photos are lovely.
Keep asking questions, the all seeing eyes must render their replies. Sometimes, they are even right!
May Peace and Love bless you ALL, and light your universe beyond all understanding. Its worth more than all the universes combined.
PB

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by Chris Peterson » Tue Nov 24, 2009 2:34 am

mark swain wrote:Oh Right.
For a minute , Taking a look at the image of the milky way, one would think of a very complex center .
I'm not sure if you're trying to make some point or not.

Mine was simple: there is no significant inflow of material into the center of spiral galaxies, and black holes don't generally suck things up.

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by The Code » Tue Nov 24, 2009 1:08 am

Chris p Wrote:

''We are seeing a spiral shape. The brain tries to interpret spirals as material flowing into the center (or out of it), but that isn't usually what's going on. The Sun has orbited the Milky Way many times since it was formed, but our distance from the center hasn't changed. Likewise for all the stars you see in any spiral galaxy- each is orbiting in an approximately elliptical orbit (it's a little more complex than simple Keplerian orbit dynamics, because the mass is distributed), and each is staying about the same distance from the center over time. There is no inward flow of material in a spiral galaxy.

Black holes don't suck things into them from any significant distance. It is only when you get very close- solar system sized or smaller- that you find enough dust and debris to actually slow down nearby bodies and allow them to spiral inwards. Whatever complex dynamics are occurring around black holes at galaxy centers, it isn't impacting the galaxies on the whole. We can only see such things in our own galaxy and a few nearby ones, and only at extremely high resolutions.''



Oh Right.

For a minute , Taking a look at the image of the milky way, one would think of a very complex center .

http://www.nrao.edu/pr/2009/mwrotate/

And a place where those arms where created. by a spinning gaseous center. A place of renewal.


http://www.science.psu.edu/news-and-eve ... 1-2005.htm

http://www.internationalreporter.com/Ne ... tars-.html

Re: Silver Dollar Galaxy NGC 253 (2009 Nov 21)

by rstevenson » Mon Nov 23, 2009 6:24 pm

I recall -- but not fondly -- using DEC terminals with gold text on a sort of dark olive background. (Not only are my floppies showing too, but they're BIG floppies.) It wasn't too bad because the text was quite large and blocky so it was reasonably readable. But white text on black? There are many ways to achieve a darkish background with readable text. That isn't one of them.

Rob

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